• minion •
Pronunciation: min-yên • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Noun
Meaning: 1. A servile obsequious toady; a brown-noser or slavish sycophant. 2. A favorite, teacher’s pet, someone's darling.
Notes: Even though we hear this word only rarely today, it comes to us with an abstract noun, minionism (or the even rarer minionship). The noun itself has been used as a verb, as to minion someone to your whims and fancies. I would recommend avoiding the suffix -ize; minionize changes the character of this otherwise lovely word too much.
In Play: Minion is used far more frequently in the first sense above than in the second: "When the boss arrived, surrounded by his minions and toadies, the meeting sailed far off its planned course." The second meaning is not far off the first, though, which keeps it viable: "The new finance officer, Gladys Friday, has become the president's minion and probably will get a big bonus and promotion this year."
Word History: Today’s Good Word is a variant of mignon "petite and pretty", as in filet mignon. In French and Italian the digraph GN is pronounced [ny], as we see in such borrowed words as poignant, lasagna, and cognac. However, English prefers to spell this sound as NI, hence the shift to minion. The French word shares its origin with French minet "little darling", a term of affection often used to address children and kitties. This word was originally mignot which, for reasons that remain mysterious, became mignon in some parts of France. It is this word that English has borrowed several times and in various forms over the course of its history. (Today's Good Word came from a suggestion by our enduring friend Margie Sved, no one's minion though she is one of our favorites.)
MINION
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A friend of mine has two children, one of them named Jasmine. His brother, their Uncle, calls them both his minions, tying in the name and a commanding tone.
I wonder if he knows the gentler meaning to this word?
I wonder if he knows the gentler meaning to this word?
Life is like playing chess with chessmen who each have thoughts and feelings and motives of their own.
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Demons are the minions of the Devil. Angles are the messengers of God.
I never have thought of toadies as being minions, but it might fit. I always get the feeling of great numbers when I hear minions. Toadies come easily in onesies and twosies.
I was surprised at the Good Doctor's definition 2 of minion.
I never have thought of toadies as being minions, but it might fit. I always get the feeling of great numbers when I hear minions. Toadies come easily in onesies and twosies.
I was surprised at the Good Doctor's definition 2 of minion.
It is dark at night, but the Sun will come up and then we can see.
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Much angelology is made up, often from mideval works. biblically seraphim can be translated as the "fiery ones," and these often have a serpent like character, perhaps winged sepents. "Cherubs" are not baby angels, but composite beasts, often with the body of a lion and a human head (the sphinx?). Also note that unless angels in the Bible appear as men, they strike fear in onlookers. Their usual first words are "do not fear."
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In Ephesians 6 Paul refers to most of that list, proclaiming Christ's superiority. Many scholars with whom I agree see this as an interface between Paul's Hebrew culture and Greek thought, perhaps neo-platonism. For the Greeks God was ineffable, unaware of anything beneath him. Yet his goodness and creativity overflowed, spilling out creations at various levels. About halfway down there was the Logos, who was a kind of mad scientist messing around in his lab with matter and spirit. Somehow the two got mixed and created the world. Greeks considered all the levels of existence between earth and God to be the dominions and powers. Some think Paul's mentioning them implies their reality. I doubt it. Rather I think rather than arguing about it, he's cutting through all that to proclaim Christ as Lord. The opening of John likewise addresses it: in the beginning was the logos and the logos was with God and the logos was God. Seems one cannot discuss words without bumping into context and culture!
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